Reading, Ages 4-6
First Grade, First
Chapter Books
Today's
Snack: What is the first snack most people have? Probably applesauce. So
try a little bowl, maybe with some cinnamon sprinkled on, and wash it down with
what is probably everybody's first juice to try - apple juice!
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Here are some good ideas for those first
"read-at-home" chapter books. You should be able to find these at the public
library, or, if it's your child's very first chapter book, consider buying it
in paperback at a local bookstore.
This is a special occasion! When your child is ready
for a chapter book, you can get ready to rejoice that your child is now an
independent reader.
Reading all the way through a chapter book is an
important milestone that signals to a young child that he or she is now,
officially, a READER!
You might want to keep the first chapter book in a
hope chest or memory tub for your child's important school papers and memories.
If it's true that "a book is a friend," it would be meaningful for your child
to hang on to that first chapter-book friend!
Amber Brown is Not a Crayon, etc., by Paul Danzinger
Catwings,
Ursula K. LeGuin
Go
Fish, Mary Stoltz
Junie
B. Jones and the Stupid Smelly Bus, etc., by Barbara Park
Marvin
Redpost: Kidnapped at Birth? Louis Sachar
The
Missing Fossil Mystery, Emily Herman
Pirate's
Promise, The Chalk Box Kid, etc., Cylde Robert Bulla
Sarah,
Plain and Tall, and Skylark, by
Patricia MacLachlan
The
Stories Julian Tells, Ann Carmeron
Just
So Stories by Rudyard Kipling